What is the Link Between Depression and Heart Disease?

Some people with no history of depression seem to become depressed after a heart attack. On the flip side, some people with depression but no heart disease, seem to develop heart disease at a higher rate than others as pointed out by John Hopkins Medicine.

So what’s the link between depression and heart disease?

Studies show depression may be destructive when it comes to blood clotting, blood pressure, heart rhythm and stress hormone levels. This destruction may be why depressed patients with stable cardiovascular disease “are at a two to three times higher risk of dying than similar patients without depression,” wrote The New York Times.

Inflammation, which increases heart disease risk and death, may be another link.

Dr. Lauren M. Osborne, assistant professor of psychiatry, Johns Hopkins University, told The New York Times that after giving patients certain medications, doctors had noticed an increase in the level of inflammatory molecules in the blood often coincided with a greater tendency to depression.

An elevated C-reactive protein (CRP) level, has been linked to inflammation of the heart and blood vessels. Inflammation increases collagen production. Collagen’s job is to connect our skin, bones, tendons and muscles. The problem: too much collagen and it stiffens the heart.

The University of Maryland study also showed that depressed people have higher CRP levels than those who do not suffer from depression.

Some experts believe that there is yet another link. Depression can even out the normal ups and downs in heart rate. That’s not a good sign. It means the heart is weaker and less flexible.

A joint English and French study followed nearly 6,000 British adults and found that those who were depressed — and had heart disease — had a risk of dying early that was at least three times higher than those who had neither condition.

Montreal Heart Institute researchers tracked 222 heart attack survivors and found that those suffering from depression were nearly six times more likely than others to die within six months of their heart attack.

The study also found that depression led to an eight-fold increase in death rates 18 months after a heart attack.

A final link: Depression may prompt heart disease to actually start. HealthDay News wrote that, according to several studies, depressed people who are otherwise healthy are more likely to develop heart disease.

Many doctors say that more awareness of the depression-heart disease link is critical, as is understanding the differences in treating depression versus heart disease.

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